Which of the following sentences from “Day of the Butterfly” does not support the story's theme of the struggle, as humans, to belong and have a friend? (1 point) Responses "Everybody knew of Jimmy Sayla’s shame and at recess...he did not dare go out on the school grounds, where the other little boys, and some bigger ones, were waiting to chase him and corner him against the back fence and thrash him with tree branches." "Everybody knew of Jimmy Sayla’s shame and at recess...he did not dare go out on the school grounds, where the other little boys, and some bigger ones, were waiting to chase him and corner him against the back fence and thrash him with tree branches." "Most of the teachers at our school had been teaching for a long time and at recess they would disappear into the teachers’ room and not bother us." "Most of the teachers at our school had been teaching for a long time and at recess they would disappear into the teachers’ room and not bother us." "Then we would walk up to her in formal groups of three or four and at a signal, say together, ‘Hel-lo Myra, Hello Myra!’ and follow up with something like, ‘What do you wash your hair in, Myra, it’s so nice and shiny, My-ra.’ ‘Oh, she washes it in cod-liver oil, don’t you, Myra, she washes it in cod-liver oil, can’t you smell it?’" "Then we would walk up to her in formal groups of three or four and at a signal, say together, ‘Hel-lo Myra, Hello Myra!’ and follow up with something like,

‘What do you wash your hair in, Myra, it’s so nice and shiny, My-ra.’ ‘Oh, she washes it in cod-liver oil, don’t you, Myra, she washes it in cod-liver oil, can’t you smell it?’"

This sentence does not support the theme of the struggle to belong and have a friend because it demonstrates the mean-spirited teasing and exclusion of Myra.